Issue 1
21 articles- pp. 7-51
Depression: An Evolutionarily Conserved Mechanism to Terminate Separation Distress? A Review of Aminergic, Peptidergic, and Neural Network Perspectives
Douglas F. Watt & Jaak Panksepp - pp. 61-66
Is Sadness an Evolutionarily Conserved Brain Mechanism to Dampen Reward Seeking? Depression May Be a “Sadness Disorder”
Peter Freed - pp. 67-70
Depression as a Mechanism for Terminating Separation Distress: A Critical Review
Paul E. Holtzheimer - pp. 70-75
Depression: What is the Role of Physiological Dysregulation and Circadian Disruption?
Ilia Karatsoreos & Bruce S. McEwen - pp. 76-80
An Integrated Theory of Depression
Otto F. Kernberg - pp. 81-84
An Evolutionarily Conserved Depression Mechanism: Are There Implications for Psychotherapy?
Harold W. Koenigsberg - pp. 85-86
Depression and the Brain's Input: Intrinsic Brain Activity and Difference-based Coding
Georg Northoff - pp. 87-109
Response to Commentaries
Douglas F. Watt & Jack Panksepp - pp. 133-135
Research Digest
Peter Freed - pp. 137-137
Bulletin of the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society
Maggie Zellner - pp. 137-138
The Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience Chapter of the Argentine Psychoanalytical Association
Diego Cohen, Beatriz Dorfman Lerner & Marcelo Rodríguez - pp. 138-139
The Israeli Forum of Neuropsychoanalysis
Irith Raveh - pp. 139-140
Istanbul Neuropsychoanalysis Study Group
F. Gökçe Özkarar - pp. 140-140
Neurogestalt, Montréal
Gilles Delisle - pp. 140-141
French-English Discussion Group on Patients with Neurological Problems
Annaïk Fève - pp. 141-141
Prague Neuropsychoanalysis Group
Joseph Dodds - pp. 142-142
Toronto Group, International Neuropsychoanalysis Society
James W. Deutsch
Issue 2
22 articles- pp. 147-149
Editors' Introduction
Oliver Turnbull & David Olds - pp. 163-167
Not to be Confused about Free Association
Ariane Bazan - pp. 168-171
Free Association as a Bridging Concept between Dynamic and Cognitive Processes and the Nature of Psychotherapeutic Change
Andrew J. Gerber - pp. 171-179
Therapeutic Free Association is a Unique Cognitive, Affective, and Verbal Action Warranting Further Psychoanalytic and Neural Investigation
Robert D. Scharf - pp. 179-180
Response to Commentaries
Sean A. Spence - pp. 197-209
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder after Traumatic Brain Injury and Interpersonal Relationships: Contributions from Object-Relations Perspectives
Giles Yeates - pp. 211-226
Reflecting on Mirror Self-misrecognition
Diana Caine - pp. 227-240
The Neurological Correlates of Pathological Consciousness in the Group of Schizophrenias
Donald Charles Grant & Edwin Harari - pp. 244-246
Research Digest
Peter Freed - pp. 247-247
Bulletin of the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society
Maggie Zellner - pp. 247-248
The Vienna Neuropsychoanalysis Study Group
Gerald Wiest - pp. 248-248
The Toronto Group
James W. Deutsch - pp. 248-248
The Berlin Neuropsychoanalysis Young Investigators
Daniel Margulies - pp. 249-249
The Body-Mind Study Groups of the Swedish Psychoanalytic Society
Iréne Matthis, Magnus Kilhlbom, Ulla Bjerström, Ulla Lagerlöf & Lisbet Horst Klawitter - pp. 250-250
The Istanbul Neuropsychoanalysis Study Group
Fatma Gökçe Özkarar - pp. 250-250
The MindBrain Consortium, Akron, Ohio
David Pincus - pp. 250-251
The Body Image Study Group, New York
Larry Kunstadt - pp. 251-251
The Neuropsychoanalytic Clinical Study Center of NPAP, New York
Edith Laufer & Ann Rose Simon - pp. 252-253
Report from the Tenth International Neuropsychoanalysis Anniversary Congress
Diana Caine